By Md Zeyaul Haque, IOL
South Asia Bureau
NEW DELHI, July 16
(IslamOnline)- A section of India's Hindu and Muslim leadership met
here on Monday, July 15, to restore cordiality to their relationship
under severe strain with anti-Muslim pogroms in the western state of
Gujarat and the murder of 27 Hindus in Jammu and Kashmir in north
India.
The ice-breaking historic
meeting, organized by the National Commission on Minorities (NCM),
observed a two-minute silence for the victims of Gujarat and Jammu,
and began proceedings on a conciliatory note. To avoid acrimony, it
skirted the contentious issues of Gujarat, Babri Masjid (450-year-old
mosque demolished by a frenzied mob of Hindus in 1992) and Jammu and
Kashmir.
An assortment of Muslim
religious leaders -- ulama, mosque prayer leaders (imams), a Shia
'alim and an 'alim heading the state-run Minority Financial and
Development Corporation comprised the Muslim delegation.
The mainstream Muslim
religious leadership stayed away from the meeting. None of the major
Muslim religious organisations -- Jamiatul Ulema-e- Hind, Jamaat-e-
Islami, Muslim Majlis-e Mushawarat, Milli Council and All India Muslim
Personal Law Board -- was represented. Shia scholar Maulana Kalb-e
Sadiq, the vice-president of Muslim Personal Law Board, clarified that
he was not representing the board. However, he said the board chairman
Maulana Muhammad Rabey Hasani Nadwi desired that he should participate
in the meeting.
Interestingly, the Muslim
contingent had figures known for their conciliatory, live-and-let-live
stance, while the Hindu delegation had men from hard-line Hindu
organizations like Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and its allied
organizations like Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), organizations
implicated in the Gujarat pogrom as well in the demolition of the
Babri Mosque.
As the Muslim leaders talked
of peace and reconciliation, the RSS, VHP and others showed no regret
for their role in Gujarat nor any signs of diluting the anti-Muslim
program over Ayodhya Temple. Parveen Togadia of the VHP declared that
no dialogue was possible with the “serpents in our sleeves,” by
which he meant Muslims of India.
However, such proximity talks
are always likely to degenerate into trading charges, but this one
remained by and large on track, and even cordial.
For much of the cordiality
ulama of vision and wide sympathies like Maulana Kalb-e-Abid and
Maulana Wahiduddin Kahn could be credited. These men are of the firm
opinion that peace is the ultimate value in Islam, and the religion
demands an all-inclusive compassion that envelops not only Muslims but
entire humanity. They go by the Islamic dictum that the entire
Creation is God’ s family. This attitude made it easier for the
two-hour meeting to move on relatively smoothly.
The meeting was only an
ice-breaking exercise. Such meetings are also being scheduled for
future, where the two sides (hopefully, a wider cross-section of
Muslim religious opinion) would finally try to work on the tough
issues of Babri Masjid, India’ s other mosques and madrasahs. That
the future sessions would be stormy was clear from Parveen Togadia’
s declaration that unless the Babri Masjid site was handed over to VHP
for temple construction and unless the other two historic mosques in
Kashi and Mathura (in the northern state of Uttar Pardesh) were given
to Hindus, unless cow slaughter was banned and Hindu refugees
resettled in Kashmir, there was no point in such talks.
Jamaat-e-Islami Hind
vice-president Maulana Shafi Moonis told IslamOnline Tuesday, July 16,
that conciliatory meetings were welcome, but the Hindu organizations
involved in the talks were neither representative of wider Hindu
opinion nor interested in giving up their anti-Muslim agenda.
Hindu-Muslim amity talks were essential, only the organizations
selected for it were not up to the great task of national
reconciliation, he added.
President of All India Muslim
Majlis-e-Mushawarat, Syed Shahabuddin, said in a statement that the
maulanas were “ handpicked for the meeting” by Maulana Jamil
Iliyasi, president of the All India Organization of Imams, and Qazi
Mian Mohammad Mazhari, chairman of the Minorities Financial and
Development Corporation. “ Neither of them enjoys any weight within
the Muslim community,” the statement said.
The Mushawarat president
rejected the parleys saying Hindutva (Hindu revivalist) organizations
like VHP and RSS did not represent all Hindus, and were incorrigibly
hostile to Islam and Muslims. They had shown no contrition over their
role in Gujarat. On the contrary, they had hailed the pogroms as
assertion of the Hindu spirit.
Syed Shahabuddin called the
meeting a bid to cover up the RSS-VHP atrocities in Gujarat. He also
criticized the NCM for organizing the meeting. The NCM which had “
failed to secure any benefit for the victims or even get its own
recommendations accepted by the central and state governments, is
repeatedly and deliberately trying to serve the interests of the Sangh
Parivar at the behest of the Union government,” he said